Anne Marie here, looking forward to the end of the holidays when we can all toast the new year with a martini in hand. Many iconic movie lines seem to have come from characters who were three sheets to the wind, so I'd like to celebrate a few of them. I'll start with one of my favorite divas: Margo Channing, Star of Screen and Scotch. Her poison of the night is martinis very dry; buckets of them in fact. During her party - after "fasten your seat belts" but before the bumpiest part of the night - Margo corners Max to deliver this gem:

Bill's thirty-two. He looks thirty-two. He looked it five years ago, he'll look it twenty years from now. I hate men."

Though swimming in her self-pity at the bottom of a martini glass, Margot Channing is still a star.

Stars - even drunk ones - get the best lines, and the true insight and witty delivery speak to both Bette Davis's fantastic acting and Mankiewicz's devilish dialogue.

"Maybe I just didn`t have the temperament for stardom. I`ll never forget seeing Bette Davis at the Hilton in Madrid. I went up to her and said, "Miss Davis, I`m Ava Gardner and I`m a great fan of yours." And do you know, she behaved exactly as I wanted her to behave. "Of course you are, my dear," she said. "Of course you are." And she swept on. Now that`s a star."

"Hello Dexter. Hello George. Hello Mike." ~Katharine Hepburn, The Philadelphia Story, more for delivery than for the line itself

"That's fucking amazing." ~Meryl Streep, Adaptation, again for delivery. Granted, she's tipsy on a fictitious orchid-extract drug, not alcohol, but I still think it counts.

"And I say to the cabbie, 'Take me to the middle of the George Washington Bridge.' And the cabbie turns around and he says, 'Don't do it, buddy! You're a young man! You've got got your whole life ahead of you!'" ~William Holden, Network

Also (cheating a little bit) but Kym's entire toast at Rachel's rehearsal dinner in Rachel Getting Married, if we want to expand the category to include lines from recovering alcoholics/substance abusers. That entire speech was perfection from Anne Hathaway. I wish she'd do something else that stripped down and naturalistic.